How was C pronounced in Latin?

In Classical Latin, "c" was always pronounced as "k". Since Renaissance Latin grammar reform, the correct pronunciation of "c" before "e" or "i" was codified to [ts].
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Why is C pronounced as k in Latin?

This alternation is caused by a historical palatalization of /k/ which took place in Late Latin, and led to a change in the pronunciation of the sound [k] before the front vowels [e] and [i]. Later, other languages not directly descended from Latin, such as English, inherited this feature as an orthographic convention.
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How did ancient Greeks pronounce C?

"C" is pronounced soft (like "s") before "e" and "i" sounds, otherwise it's pronounced hard (like "k"). (This is quite unhistorical; in ancient times all "c"s were hard, but we are used to pronouncing "Caesar," "Circe," etc. with a soft "c.")
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Do you pronounce the C in ancient?

Both Ancient Hebrew and Ancient Greek had two letters pronounced like a K. In Greek, one letter looks like a K and is pronounced that way, and we always transliterate this as a C, as described above.
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Why is Caesar pronounced with soft C?

"Soft c" isn't a true c, but it is s or tsh. But letter c isn't truly a c either, but a g. The third letter was originally g as it still is in Greek known as gamma. But when the Etruscans took the alphabet in hand they didn't have "g"-sound, but used the same letter to betoken a "k" sound instead.
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Latin C



When did C become S?

This is due to the palatalization of the velar in early medieval times before the front vowel, the stages of sound change being k > ki > tš > ts > s. The letter c was applied by French orthographists in the 12th century to represent the sound ts in English, and this sound developed into the simpler sibilant s.
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Who invented the letter C?

Where did this adaptable letter come from? Like the letter G, C emerged from the Phoenician letter gimel (centuries later, gimel became the third letter of the Hebrew alphabet).
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How is C pronounced?

In English the letter 'c' is mostly pronounced as a /k/ sound. We can also pronounce 'c' as an /s/ sound.
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Why did we stop speaking Latin?

To oversimplify the matter, Latin began to die out in the 6th century shortly after the fall of Rome in 476 A.D. The fall of Rome precipitated the fragmentation of the empire, which allowed distinct local Latin dialects to develop, dialects which eventually transformed into the modern Romance languages.
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Is there Latin AK?

Some European languages currently using the Latin alphabet do not use the letters K and W, and some add extra letters (usually standard Latin letters with diacritical marks added or sometimes pairs of letters read as one sound).
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Why are cats not Spelt as Kat?

Because the word “cat” is derived from Latin, which doesn't have a letter K, and the word “kitten” is derived from Middle English, which obviously does.
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Is J silent in Latin?

Latin did not originally have the letter j, but some modern writers use it to avoid confusion. If J does appear, it is always pronounced "y" as in "you." If you are reading Latin as it was originally spelled, the letter i is sometimes this consonant "y," and sometimes a vowel.
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How did C get its name?

After language 'B', Dennis Ritchie came up with another language which was based upon 'B'. As in alphabets B is followed by C and hence he called this language as 'C'.
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Is C language still used?

Despite the prevalence of higher-level languages, the C programming language continues to empower the world. There are plenty of reasons to believe that C programming will remain active for a long time. Here are some reasons that C is unbeatable, and almost mandatory, for certain applications.
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Is C considered a low level language?

Examples of low level programming languages

C and C++ are now considered low-level languages because they have no automatic memory management.
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Why is there the soft c?

The Norman French era invented the soft C and G. They determined that the letter C was pronounced the way we associate the letter S, when it is placed before the letters I, E and Y. Otherwise the letter maintains its typical K sound.
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Why is it pronounced Seltic?

This is because language historians desired the word to better reflect its Greek and Classical Latin origins. The soft "c" sound is usually reserved for sports teams now, like the Boston Celtics.
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Is Celtic pronounced Keltic or Seltic?

People who study the Celtic culture, language, and history usually pronounce it as "Keltik," but sports fans say "Seltik."
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Is the c silent in Connecticut?

The silent C in Connecticut was never pronounced, but the C in Tucson once was.
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Why is C silent in scent?

Is the "s" or "c" silent in scent? The answer is: neither is silent. They work together as a digraph in the word scent to create the /s/ sound. Some may argue that the "c" is silent because you only hear the /s/ sound, but because "c" always makes an /s/ sound before an "e," it's not silent in scent.
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Is Latin a dead language?

Similar to Sanskrit or Ancient Greek, Latin does not have native speakers, which qualifies it as a “Dead Language”. However, Latin had such an overwhelming prevalence in European and Western science, medicine, and literature, it may never be classified as an “Extinct Language”.
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